I need to test a method that opens two files and writes different data to each of them. It doesn't matter what order the files get written in.
Here's how I'd test a method that only needs to open one file, using a Mock to replace open
:
from io import BytesIO
import mock
class MemorisingBytesIO(BytesIO):
"""Like a BytesIO, but it remembers what its value was when it was closed."""
def close(self):
self.final_value = self.getvalue()
super(MemorisingBytesIO, self).close()
open_mock = mock.Mock()
open_mock.return_value = MemorisingBytesIO()
with mock.patch('__builtin__.open', open_mock):
write_to_the_file() # the function under test
open_mock.assert_called_once_with('the/file.name', 'wb')
assert open_mock.return_value.final_value == b'the data'
I'm having trouble modifying this approach to work with a method that writes to two files. I've considered using side_effect
to return two MemorisingBytesIO
s sequentially, and asserting that each of them contains the right data, but then the test will be brittle: if the order of the calls in the method changes, the test will fail.
So what I really want to do is to have open_mock
return one MemorisingBytesIO
when it's called with one file name, and a different one when it's called with the other. I've seen this in other languages' mocking libraries: is it possible in Python without subclassing Mock
?